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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Lincoln County Historical Association
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DTSTART:20260308T070000
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DTSTART:20261101T060000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260122T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260122T183000
DTSTAMP:20260603T201954
CREATED:20260109T192538Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260112T142352Z
UID:4781-1769103000-1769106600@www.lincolncountyhistory.org
SUMMARY:The Dirigo Men of Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery: Stories of Maine's WWII Service Members
DESCRIPTION:LCHA is proud to launch our 2026 Winter Lecture Series on January 22 with author Aimee Fogg\, who will share stories of Maine’s WWII Service Members as she discusses The Dirigo Men of Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery. Thanks to sponsor J. Edward Knight Insurance\, this online lecture is free and open to the public\, pre-registration is required to receive the link to participate!\n \nCLICK HERE TO REGISTER\n \nLocated in Homburg\, Belgium\, Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery is the final resting place for 7\,992 WWII service members\, and where the names of 450 Missing in Action service members are commemorated. Fifty-four of these men called Maine home. From the state’s rocky coast along the Atlantic Ocean to its highest peak of Mount Katahdin and from towns in between\, these men answered their country’s call. They left everything familiar to fight in a faraway land. They hugged their parents\, siblings\, spouses\, and children goodbye. They missed their families. They dreamt of reunions. They wept. They suffered. They mourned. They sacrificed. They freed a continent. They liberated generations. Silenced by the passage of 80 years\, their voices speak once again in The Dirigo Men of Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery: Stories of Maine’s WWII Service Members.\n \nAimee Gagnon Fogg is the great-niece of PFC Paul M. Lavoie of Nashua\, NH\, who is interred in Plot C Row 1 Grave 9 at Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery in Homburg\, Belgium. She is the founder of They Speak: Voices of Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery\, which is dedicated to collecting the personal stories and photos of the nearly 8\,400 men of HCAC. She is the author of several publications and is also the recipient of the Daughters of the American Revolution Women in American History award. The Dirigo Men of Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery: Stories of Maine’s WWII Service Members is her third published title about HCAC. Aimee resides in New Hampshire with her husband\, their three children\, and their many pets.\n 
URL:https://www.lincolncountyhistory.org/event/dirigo-men/
LOCATION:Online
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260129T173000
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DTSTAMP:20260603T201954
CREATED:20260115T204614Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260115T204909Z
UID:4792-1769707800-1769711400@www.lincolncountyhistory.org
SUMMARY:Laboring Lives and Hidden Stories in Colonial New England
DESCRIPTION:Thanks to sponsor J. Edward Knight Insurance\, this online lecture is free and open to the public\, pre-registration is required to receive the link to participate! \nClick here to register \nColonial New England has long been associated with free labor. But\, in reality\, most colonial New England households were mixed-labor settings. They relied on a diverse group of unfree people\, including Indigenous\, African\, and European women and men\, who served as indentured\, enslaved\, and hired laborers. In this presentation\, Dr. Carbonell will survey the landscape of labor in seventeenth- and eighteenth- century New England\, exploring how and under what terms this diverse group of laborers joined colonial households. In her talk\, Dr. Carbonell will also reflect on the process of researching laboring people in colonial records that often obscure their histories.  \nCaylin Carbonell is an Assistant Professor of History at Bowdoin College\, where she teaches courses on colonial North America. She earned her Ph.D. in History from William & Mary in 2020 and her B.A. from Bates College in 2012. Dr. Carbonell is currently working on a book manuscript which peers in on New England’s colonial households and their daily goings-on at a granular level to examine the intimate contestations and collaborations between household members. Her writing has previously appeared in Early American Studies\, Commonplace: The Journal of Early American Life and the Junto: A Group Blog on Early American History. 
URL:https://www.lincolncountyhistory.org/event/laboring-lives/
LOCATION:Online
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